Los Angeles Times

A festival that popped

- Calendar@latimes.com

The 45th anniversar­y of the legendary Monterey Internatio­nal Pop Music Festival will be marked June 17 with a screening at Cinefamily of the D.A. Pennebaker documentar­y “Monterey Pop” and a Q&A session with Lou Adler, who produced the event — the first major rock festival — with John Phillips of the Mamas & the Papas. Adler also wrote the introducti­on for a new commemorat­ive volume, “A Perfect Haze: The Illustrate­d History of the Monterey Internatio­nal Pop Festival,” written by Harvey and Kenneth Kubernik for Santa Monica Press.

What inspired the Monterey Pop Festival?

Acouple of things inspired it. One was a conversati­on at Cass Elliot— Mama Cass’ — house a few months before the festival. And it was John Phillips, Paul McCartney, myself and Cass and Michelle [Phillips]. The discussion was how rock ’n’ roll wasn’t considered an art form as jazz was. They were both American forms of music. And then a man named Alan Pariser, about a month later, had gone to the Monterey Jazz Festival and came to us as a promoter to hire the Mamas & the Papas for a concert at the Monterey [County] Fairground­s. And John and I thought this might be the situation we were looking for, where we could put rock ’n’ roll into a venue that is known for jazz, thereby elevating it. Then the idea [came] to make it a charity. So we contacted as many artists in as many genres of what was considered pop music, and that was the impetus.

In what sense was it charitable?

We immediatel­y establishe­d a foundation. All the artists performed for free. There was an admission charge, but most of the money was made on the sale of the television rights to the American Broadcasti­ng Co., which eventually never took place.

Why didn’t it take place?

The head of ABC at the time was Tom Moore, and we were supposed to show him some of the footage that had been filmed at Monterey, and we chose to show him Jimi Hendrix fornicatin­g with his amp.

That was naughty of you. Why did you do that?

We obviously thought we had something more than was television-worthy. It may have seemed underhande­d, but we wanted to see if the film and the festival were going to be represente­d in the way that it happened. So we chose to show him that, and he rejected the film. Jimi Hendrix also smashed his guitar there, and so did Pete Townshend. Had that been done before?

It was the first time I think an American audience had ever seen it. Hendrix and Townshend were familiar with each other’s act because of both having played in England. It certainly was trying to top each other. Jimi Hendrix lost the coin toss to go first. So is that why he lit his guitar on fire?

That’s exactly right. He said to Townshend in a different set of words, “I’m going to do something you’re not going to be able to match.” No one knew. If you watch the film, the stage managers and the people who owned the equipment were completely taken by surprise, and they’re shown trying to rescue microphone­s and drums.

Paul McCartney was the one who suggested booking Jimi Hendrix and the Who. Also [Rolling Stones manager] Andrew Oldham. It came from Paul and from Andrew. So they were the catalyst for Jimi Hendrix’s and the Who’s introducti­on to the U.S.?

Iwould say they were. We went to them for any acts coming out of England that they thought should have been exposed. Monterey seems to have gone more smoothly than Woodstock did two years later. Was that simply a function of the different weather?

Monterey was about the music — Woodstock was about the weather. Not many people remember the music that came out of Woodstock. They talk about the rain and the amount of people. Just the fact that it was East Coast and the sheer numbers is why it’s talked about. But when anyone wants to talk about the music that was created during that period or the iconic groups that came out of it, they were at Monterey. Some also performed at Woodstock but not with the impact they had at Monterey. Did other festival producers — like the people behind Woodstock — ever ask your advice?

John Phillips and I were asked to be involved in Woodstock, and we decided not to. I don’t remember the real reason. They already had three or four people that were involved, and I think the fact that we were joining something as opposed to starting something probably was the reason for the decision. What aspect of Monterey’s legacy are you proudest of?

I’m most proud that the legacy of Monterey after 45 years that there are iconic artists like Otis Redding and Janis Joplin and Hendrix and the Who — artists that were introduced on one level or another at Monterey still have an impact on music. And above and beyond that is the foundation. It was the first rock and roll charity establishe­d and maybe it led to Live Aid and Farm Aid. And the fact that we are still writing checks, giving money to causes on be-

half of the artists that appeared at Monterey.

Who do you listen to these days?

I have a house full of kids. I listen to what comes out of their rooms. Out of one room is coming electronic music, and I listen to Deadmau5 out of that room. In another room I might be listening to Coldplay. I listen to Adele, who I think is tremendous. When I’m in the car, I’ll listen to the ’40s, ’50s, ’60s and ’70s, and I’ll jump over to Siriusly Sinatra. I listen to pretty much everything. I hit the buttons.

What else are you doing?

I just finished, last week, an animated film with Cheech and Chong based on the old tracks we did at that time, for theatrical release. My wife and I have establishe­d a camp with Paul Newman called the Painted Turtle for children with chronic and life-threatenin­g illnesses, so I spend a great deal of my time fundraisin­g. I have seven boys — I spend a lot of time with my children. My oldest boy, who runs the Roxy on Sunset Boulevard, his name is Nicholai, he’s 38; my youngest son is 10 years old.

 ?? Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ?? LOU ADLER put on the Monterey Internatio­nal Pop Festival with John Phillips in 1967.
Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times LOU ADLER put on the Monterey Internatio­nal Pop Festival with John Phillips in 1967.

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